Was Zola connected to the SSR database or an old SHIELD Database?
I feel that he was air gapped, but I could be wrong.
I feel that he was air gapped, but I could be wrong.
I thought the same thing.I wonder if Peggy's going to run into a big goofy brunnet named Buffy and her shorter blond friend Hildy sometime?![]()
New York's geography has to be among the most thoroughly documented among Earth's cities. If you can't nail down a grade-level crossing somewhere in 1946 Brooklyn...
How's this for an obscure comic easter egg-- Remember the guy Peggy fought on the boat? According to Thompson his name was "Jerome Zandow. He had a side-show act on Coney Island."
"Zandow the Strong Man" first appeared in Captain America 5, 1941.
New York's geography has to be among the most thoroughly documented among Earth's cities. If you can't nail down a grade-level crossing somewhere in 1946 Brooklyn...
I think the worst offender was Battle: Los Angeles, which featured Los Angeles in the title, referred to specific geographic locations, and still managed to screw everything up.
Given the time pressures of television combined with the 70 year break in history, I can forgive them for not being as precise as they should be for a relatively minor plot point (the travel time from their office to this location).
I really don't know what they are going to do with Black Widow's age. Her backstory was supposedly told breifly in Avengers, but that really could be all just a cover.
Nah, the worst of all time's gotta be Bullit: Steve McQueen, over the course of the famous car chase, teleports from Potrero Hill to Pac Heights, which, okay, fine, but then he drives west along the Marina, heading towards the Golden Gate Bridge... and presto, several shots later, he's in some rural rocky cliff-lined highway that looks nothing like any part of Marin, with no Bay or Bridge in sight. And this occurs during the big car chase!!I think the worst offender was Battle: Los Angeles, which featured Los Angeles in the title, referred to specific geographic locations, and still managed to screw everything up.
New York's geography has to be among the most thoroughly documented among Earth's cities. If you can't nail down a grade-level crossing somewhere in 1946 Brooklyn...
I think the worst offender was Battle: Los Angeles, which featured Los Angeles in the title, referred to specific geographic locations, and still managed to screw everything up.
Given the time pressures of television combined with the 70 year break in history, I can forgive them for not being as precise as they should be for a relatively minor plot point (the travel time from their office to this location).
Ever see Rumble in the Bronx? It was shot in Vancouver. There were scenes with the Cascade Mountains clearly visible in the background, where very-flat New Jersey should be.
Perhaps the waitress is up to something, but I would rather her be a regular person - a break from the spies.
Enjoyed this episode a lot, but, there's some weird-ass geography going on. Stark's mansion is only a short distance to industrial-type docks, okay. But the SSR agents must have been moving at Barry Allen speed to get to the scene (in Brooklyn, was it?) in the minutes between the time Jarvis hung up, even if he paused for a smoke or something, and their arrival. And then... was the prisoner being brought to the Manhattan office? (The chief said he didn't want to blow up the island.) But what kind of train tracks lie between the Brooklyn shore and Manhattan?!
I really don't know what they are going to do with Black Widow's age. Her backstory was supposedly told breifly in Avengers, but that really could be all just a cover.
There's no reason why the movies' Black Widow has to be any older than she appears. The only reason she's so long-lived in the comics is because of Marvel's sliding time scale -- the character was introduced in 1964, and since it's all treated as a single continuity, they have to come up with cheats to explain why characters who were around in the Cold War are still young in the 21st century. But the movies are a separate continuity that's less than seven years old (wow, that recent?), so it doesn't have the same continuity baggage and doesn't have to employ the same contrivances and cheats to deal with it.
I think the worst offender was Battle: Los Angeles, which featured Los Angeles in the title, referred to specific geographic locations, and still managed to screw everything up.
Given the time pressures of television combined with the 70 year break in history, I can forgive them for not being as precise as they should be for a relatively minor plot point (the travel time from their office to this location).
Ever see Rumble in the Bronx? It was shot in Vancouver. There were scenes with the Cascade Mountains clearly visible in the background, where very-flat New Jersey should be.
Actually New Jersey isn't very flat. It has some serious hills and even a few mountains, like the Ramapo Mountains, which I use to hike often.
I really don't know what they are going to do with Black Widow's age. Her backstory was supposedly told breifly in Avengers, but that really could be all just a cover.
There's no reason why the movies' Black Widow has to be any older than she appears. The only reason she's so long-lived in the comics is because of Marvel's sliding time scale -- the character was introduced in 1964, and since it's all treated as a single continuity, they have to come up with cheats to explain why characters who were around in the Cold War are still young in the 21st century. But the movies are a separate continuity that's less than seven years old (wow, that recent?), so it doesn't have the same continuity baggage and doesn't have to employ the same contrivances and cheats to deal with it.
I think Natasha did reference working for the KGB in one of the movies, though, which doesn't quite work if you do the math . . ..
Ever see Rumble in the Bronx? It was shot in Vancouver. There were scenes with the Cascade Mountains clearly visible in the background, where very-flat New Jersey should be.
Actually New Jersey isn't very flat. It has some serious hills and even a few mountains, like the Ramapo Mountains, which I use to hike often.
I know, I live in Oakland, right at the edge of the Ramapos. Almost THIRTY miles from the Bronx. And we're talking, in the movie, NJ as seen from the Bronx (Or would it be Staten Island?). When I fly into Newark Airport, with Manhattan out the windows on one side, and look out over NJ, it is very FLAT as far as the eye can see. And certainly flatter than the freakin cascade Mountains!![]()
Would her coworkers not be aware of her war record? Or, does she just keep mum to earn her own way with a new group?
I think Natasha did reference working for the KGB in one of the movies, though, which doesn't quite work if you do the math . . ..
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